62. Mt. Tabor Baptist Church (formerly
Zion Evangelical Lutheran and St. Barnabas Episcopal churches). Constructed
1849. Early example of Gothic Revival stone church in the style of St.
James the Less.

125-129. Row of three brick and stone two-and-a- half story
row houses with wood trim. Mansard roofs with a gable dormer facing the
street. Two register facades with a small covered porch for each entry
door.

Second Site of Methodist Churches/Harmer School.
Stone church constructed 1823. Demolished 1858 for the construction of
a larger, brick church. Harmer School dedicated on this site in 1903. In
1998 the site of Robert Fulton Public School.

The rest of this block (nos. 11, 17, 19, 29, 31, 43, 45, 51, and 53)
are double houses all in the same Second Empire style. Built of Wissahickon
Schist by Thomas Mullineaux, c. 1872-1878. Archival
documentation is available for specific addresses.

Unit block East Walnut Lane, north side, between
Germantown Avenue and Baynton Street:

Germantown Atlases from the last three decades of the nineteenth century
show buildings from the Button Mills on this site.
The mill buildings were demolished in the summer of 1905 for the erection
of the following twins.